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According to a report from the Associated Press, the
officials behind the OLPC project revealed that the new price of their device
has increased to $188. Earlier this year the OLPC officials confirmed that
producing one single machine will cost about $176.
Though, the One Laptop per Child group has said that it
hopes to reach economies of scale for reducing the cost of the machines to the
countries that will then be able to purchase them down to the $100 level.
But on Friday OLPC’s Spokesman George Snell blamed the
increase on a variety of factors, including currency fluctuations and rising
costs of such components as nickel and silicon
According to AP, Snell said the foundation behind the
project was committed to keeping the price from rising above $190.
The “100$ notebook” or OLPC XO-1) is produced by Quanta
Computers, who has a 33% market share of laptops world-wide. It contains an AMD
LX-Geode CPU at 700 MHz and 256 MB of RAM. There is no hard disk, but a 1 GB
flash memory. A dual-mode SVGA LCD screen (Monochrome and Colour mode) helps
saving power. It has a built-in wireless network interface and colour camera.
In July OLPC
announced they have succeeded yet to get the 3 million orders for OLPC that
were needed to get production started and the OLPC is ready for mass production.
OLPC said there are at least seven countries (Argentina,
Brazil, Libya, Nigeria,
Pakistan, Thailand, and Uruguay) that have expressed
interest in purchasing these laptops.
During the same month the project received a major boost as
Intel withdrew its opposition to the project and, more than that, entered a
deal with OLPC, exchanging each other’s technologies.
Intel’s decision was considered as a major win for OLPC’s
initiative, because the chip maker has promoted its own version of a cheap notebook,
called Classmate 200.
In August, Quanta Computer announced
it has completed a manufacturing run of 300 units to test the production
process. The shipping of the first OLPC notebooks is expected later this month
or in early October.
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